Method and apparatus for gathering and using geocoded information from mobile devices

ABSTRACT

Methods and apparatus for using geocoding information from a user&#39;s mobile device to determine program and advertising media content to deliver to the user.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION

The present application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/732,296, filed on Dec. 31, 2012, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.

BACKGROUND

Technical Field

The technical field relates to acquiring and using geocoding information from a user's mobile device to determine program and advertising content to present to the user, and to acquiring and using geocoding information included in program and advertising content to enhance content presentation to the user.

Description of the Related Art

Some mobile devices obtain latitude and longitude coordinates at various times. These devices, such as Smartphones or tablets, are typically carried with a user during the day and therefore have the same latitude and longitude as the user's location. These devices may use GPS, wireless network identification, cell phone triangulation and/or other location methods to determine latitude and longitude.

Mobile devices also send information to other devices, including those connected on the same network or on different networks. These devices may communicate via a cell phone network carrier, data network carrier, wireless network, Bluetooth connections, or other communication methods.

Receiving devices, such as set top boxes, receive content from a content distributor. The received content consists of program and advertising content, as well as content information which may include title, description, length, and other information. Examples of program content include but are not limited to movies, documentaries, series, and audio programs. Examples of advertising content include but are not limited to infomercials, product advertisements, and coupons for particular stores such as department stores, automotive stores, and restaurants.

Broadcasters can currently target advertising at certain households based on demographic information such as age, number of people in a household, income, credit score, etc. In one example Invidi Technologies uses data from sources such as Experian® to target advertisements to set top boxes based on information found in a user's credit report. Determining relevant program and advertising content based on the geocoded location history of set top box users is not currently used.

Some content-generation devices, such as cameras in GPS-enabled Smartphones and GPS-enabled video recorders such as the Sony Handycam HDR-XR520V, are able to capture geocoding information in the form of latitude and longitude and associate it with pictures or video clips during filming. In addition, editing systems exist that allow geocoding information to be edited or inserted into content after generation.

Broadcast content providers such as HBO, Showtime, NBC, and others do not currently include geocoding information in their broadcast content.

BRIEF SUMMARY

Households and businesses typically receive television and audio content through satellite or cable systems. Content providers, including HBO, Showtime, NBC and others distribute content through satellite companies or cable systems operators to customers have a receiving device, commonly known as a set top box. Content consists of program content and advertising content. Set top box users select program content to view or to record for later viewing and receive advertising content in various forms, for example when a movie is viewed. The user selects program content to view based on the user's personal preferences.

One way a set top box can enhance and personalize content is to gather a user's location history with the user's personal mobile device, such as a Smartphone or tablet, which can geocode the user's location in the form of latitude, longitude, and time. This location history can then be mapped back to businesses, home addresses, vacation spots, schools, traffic routes, scenes in a movie, sporting venues, and so on to determine the locations the user has been in proximity to. The set top box can analyze the user's location history, user preferences, and content information to determine and present content relevant to the user. Note, in this specification a location a user “has been” at may also include where the user currently is.

If relevant content is found, the user can be notified in several ways. The set top box might suggest upcoming programs to watch or record, for example “I noticed you were at Sports Authority field, would you like me to set up a recording for the Bronco game this weekend?” Or, make suggestions like “You recently visited Hawaii, and I noticed there is a special documentary about the island of Kauai on this weekend.” These suggestions, or the content itself, can be presented on a television connected to the set top box or can be delivered to the user's mobile device.

In addition to program suggestions, the set top box can notify the user of advertising content based on the user's location. This advertising content may involve gathering coupon information in advertisements. For example, if the user regularly passes by an Applebee's restaurant around lunch time, an advertisement or coupon for Applebee's can be presented to the user. If the set top box has a real-time connection to the user's mobile device and therefore knows where the user currently is, a coupon can be sent directly to the user's mobile device if the user is near an Applebee's restaurant. The coupon can also be adjusted based on the real-time status of the restaurant, for example a more favorable coupon offered if the restaurant is not busy. This may be a part of a vendor subscription service for enhanced advertising operated by set top box providers.

Locations can be tracked for multiple users associated with a set top box. The set top box can use relationships between the users and the proximity between the users known in real-time to present different content based on the users' situations such as how close the users are to each other. For example, if the set top box determines that two parents were next to each other and were near a Cheesecake Factory restaurant, a two-for-one coupon may be pushed in real-time to the parent's mobile device for the restaurant's lounge. If the two parents and two children are in a car driving by a Cheesecake Factory, the set top box may instead push a coupon for a free entrée and dessert at the restaurant's main dining room to the parents' mobile devices.

Users may also be alerted to special news program content depending on location history. For example, if the set top box determines a user's normal commute route, any content describing accidents or construction occurring along that commute route can be sent to the user. Or, if the set top box knows a user is a child, any “breaking news” or alerts occurring around the child's location, or near the child's school, can be sent to the parent's mobile device. Amber alerts may also be sent out this way.

A user may also receive information based on the geocoding locations of other users. For example, if a husband (or wife) spends two hours at a Nordstrom's store, the wife (or husband) may receive a coupon to that store with an explanation that the spouse had recently gone into the store and may like something from there. In this example, the wife (or husband) may have also indicated her (or his) interest in the store or in a coupon for the store via the set top box.

A user can also query the set top box to find relevant content or information. For example, to find out whether there are coupons or specials for stores near the user or if there are any documentary programs on locations where the user has travelled in the last six months.

In these ways, one or more users associated with a set top box can receive enhanced viewing of program and advertising content based on their present location or location history.

In addition, broadcast content such as individual programs or advertisements, or scenes within a program or advertisement, may also contain geocoding information that describes location information associated with that content segment. For example, the filming location of a scene, the location represented in the scene, the location of a landmark viewable in the scene, the filming location of the advertisement, or the locations where a coupon may be redeemed can be geocoded and included in the content.

By extracting this information, the set top box enables a user to search program or advertising content for location information. For example, a user can query “Where are all of the filming locations for Top Gun?” or “Where was the scene that I am watching now filmed?”

By combining user geocoding information and content geocoding information, the user can make more powerful queries. For example, “What movies have been filmed near my current location?”, or “What movies have been filmed at the locations I have been at over the last six months?”

Using geocoding information tracked from a user's mobile device and geocoding information embedded in content, the set top box can enhance the viewing experience and value of the content to the user by gathering and translating the data in relevant and useful ways.

In addition, businesses such as content providers, local businesses, satellite companies and cable operators, can insert coupons into content, including advertising content, displayed via a set top box. These coupons may appear to the user viewing the content in a number of forms, such as a text “hotlink” overlaying a video image asking the user to click user the remote control to select the coupon, or as a QR image the user reads off of the screen using a Smartphone. This coupon, redeemable for goods or services, may be available to a user on viewing the content during the original broadcast date, or some amount of time past the viewing date (for example, if the content was recorded vs. being watched live). The coupon would then be made available to the user such as electronically on a Smartphone to be redeemed within the terms and conditions of the coupon.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1: Geocoding Broadcast Content

FIG. 2: Overview of the System

FIG. 3: Overview of the Receiver/Set Top Box Operation

FIG. 4: Process of a Mobile Device sending Geocoding Information to the Set Top Box

FIG. 5A and 5B: Associating Geocoding with a Video Stream

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

Described herein are systems, methods, and apparatus for gathering geocoding information for one or more users associated with a set top box, sending that information to a set top box to determine content relevant to the user, and then presenting that content. User geocoding information, which may take the form of latitude, longitude and time, is regularly gathered from a mobile device which is personal to the user and therefore generally tracks the location of the user throughout the day. Also described are systems, methods, and apparatus for gathering geocoding information associated with broadcast content, storing that information at a set top box, and using that information in addition to other content information to enhance the user's viewing experience.

FIG. 1 is an overview diagram of a system embodiment in which content flows from a content generator 11 through the broadcast system to the Set Top Box 32. Content 28 consists of program and advertising content and content information, for example information contained in program guides. Geocoding information 12, for example the location where a scene was filmed, can be added to content during content generation time or added later through editing prior to broadcast. In one embodiment content flows to an uplink center 13 to a satellite 14 and to receiver dish 16. The content is then sent to a set top box 32, which extracts content information and combines it with other information the set top box has collected to enhance the user's experience with the content.

FIG. 2 is an overview block diagram of a system embodiment in which user geocoding information and content information including content geocoding information is used to automatically determine and present content relevant to a user.

One or more users 20 a-20 d associated with a set top box each carry a mobile device 21 a-21 d that can determine geocoding information for the mobile device's location. An example is a GPS-enabled Smartphone or tablet that is personal to the user and travels with the user throughout the day. As a result, the mobile device can identify the locations the user has been at.

The mobile devices and the set top box may be connected by a Communication System 24 in a number of ways. In one embodiment, if the set top box and mobile device are on the same network, an API would exist to allow the set top box to receive user geocoding information from the mobile devices 21 a-21 d. In another embodiment, user geocoding information is collected by the wireless provider network servicing the mobile device, for example, ATT, Sprint, or Verizon, and sent back to the set top box via the Internet for processing in real-time.

In one embodiment, if a user's mobile device has a real-time connection to the set top box, user geocoding information would be sent 26 directly to the set top box 32 and stored in the User Geocoding Information Database 44. Otherwise, the mobile device stores the user geocoding information locally until the device is connected to the set top box 32, at which time the stored geocoding information is sent 26 and stored in the User Geocoding Information Database 44. This database can reside on the set top box 32 or reside on one or more servers at a remote location.

Each user has the ability to opt-in or opt-out of having the user's locations tracked and sent to the set top box 32.

Content 28 is received by the set top box 32 from a receiver dish 16. In other embodiments, a cable system head end may take the place of receiver dish 16. Content includes program content such as movies, documentaries, and music, and advertising content such as infomercials, special offers, or coupons. Content information describes and categorizes content, which may include but is not limited to program type, program description, channel, start time, length, vendor name, and geocoding information that describes, for example, the filming location of a movie scene.

The set top box 32 extracts and stores content information in the Content Information Database 42. This database may also work in conjunction with or integrate with other databases, including commercial databases such as the Internet Movie Database (IMDB) 43, to extend searches for relevant content.

A Geocoded Assets Database 46 contains location names and corresponding geocoding information. The set top box uses this database to translate back and forth between geocoding information in latitude/longitude form, and a specific address, location name, or other location identifiers.

Once the set top box 32 has determined relevant content to present to a user it can deliver content locally 36 to any suitable device operable to present the content in video or audio form to the user. Examples of a presentation device include but are not limited to a television 40, a digital video recorder 38, a game system, or the like. The set top box can also present content remotely 34 through Communication System 24 to devices including a user's mobile device, such as a Smartphone or tablet with the ability to view video and play audio.

Content information may also be presented and includes text-based descriptions of content, audio description of content (e.g. voiceovers), QR Codes identifying filming locations of movie scenes, maps showing geocoding information contained in content segments, and the like.

A user can also send a User Query 35 about program or advertising content. This query could go directly to the set top box 32, or to the Content Information Database 42, the Internet Movie Database 43, or the Geocoded Assets Database 46. For example, “Are there any stores with coupons or specials near me?”, “What scenes in Top Gun have been filmed within 100 miles of my location?”, or “What movies that I have watched in the last 6 months were filmed in Austin Tex.?”. These User Queries may be sent from a user's mobile device 21 a over Communication System 24 to the set top box 32, or sent directly to the set top box via a remote control 47 or other device connected directly to the set top box.

FIG. 3 is detailed embodiment of a set top box 32. The set top box has a processor, memory, storage, and software to accept inputs and to present content relevant to a user.

User geocoding information 26 is received by the Gather and Process User Geocoding Information 54 process from the one or more users' mobile devices 21 a-21 d associated with the set top box 32. This information includes at least latitude, longitude, and time that identifies where the user has been. If the user's mobile device is connected in real-time, the set top box will know the user's current location. Geocoding information is stored in a User Geocoding Information Database 44 located in the set top box 32 or may be located in one or more remote servers. In one embodiment, if the user's mobile device 21 a-21 d is connected in real-time to the set-top-box 32, the user's geocoding information is also sent to the Determine Relevant Content to User process 56 to determine what program or advertising should be immediately pushed out 34 to the user based on the user's location.

Broadcast content 28 is received that includes program and advertising content, and content information that describes the content, such as program guides or embedded geocoding information for content segments. The set top box analyzes and extracts content information from the broadcast content using the Extract Content Information process 59 and stores the information in the Content Information Database 42. The set top box will use this content information to determine whether or not content may be relevant to a user.

Content information includes geocoding information, program information, and advertising information. Examples of geocoding information may include the latitude and longitude of the filming location of a scene in a movie, the location of a landmark appearing in a scene, such as a restaurant or monument, or the location where a broadcast sporting event is being held. A content segment may contain one or more geocoding tags. For example, a movie scene may have a geocoding tag identifying where the scene was filmed and another identifying the location the scene represents in the story. Or a food program may have geocoding tags for where the ingredients came from and a geocoding tag for where the program was filmed, for example in Maui. Advertising content may have multiple geocoding tags associated with the locations where an advertised special or coupon will be accepted.

Examples of program information may include the type of program (e.g. sports, drama, game show, symphony, documentary), subject of program (e.g. Broncos, Shakespeare, Jeopardy, Denver Symphony, Golden Gate Bridge), or location name (e.g. Mile High Stadium, Ashland, Burbank, Denver, San Francisco). Examples of advertising information include type of product (e.g. sports clothing, food, vacation packages, and tickets) or location of stores where the product may be purchased.

The User Profile Information Database 51 stores information about one or more users associated with a set top box. This information may include the user's name, mobile device identifier, general user information such as age and sex, user content interests, default searches for relevant content, and relationships to other users associated with the same set top box (e.g. spouse, child, manager, employee, etc.). This information is used to determine what and how relevant content will be sent to a user and under what conditions. This way the user can have the set top box search for and present relevant content without requiring further input from the user.

This database may also store user content presentation preferences. For example, if the set top box should automatically queue relevant program or advertising content for later viewing, or only notify the user that the content is available; if movies containing scenes filmed within twenty miles of a user's location over the last six months should be automatically recorded; if coupons should be pushed immediately to a user's mobile device or queued up for later use; or if to present descriptions of locations on a television either as text, QR Codes, or audio voiceovers. The user can specify a preferred presentation device, such as a television connected to the set top box, the user's mobile device, or another device on the Internet.

The User Profile Information Database 51 may also store user proximity preferences. For example whether to push a coupon to the user's mobile device only if the store location is currently close to the user, or to push the coupon if the store is close to the user's regular commute path. Other attributes of proximity are discussed below.

Information in the User Profile Information Database 51 may be updated from mobile devices over the network 25, 24 or from a remote control 47 attached to the set top box. User profile information may also be updated from information from other sources, such as the types of on-line or video-on-demand purchases a user has made.

Specific user queries 35 can be received by the Receive User Queries process 30. User queries can come from a remote mobile device 21 a-21 d, or from devices attached to the set top box, for example a remote control 47. The form of the queries can be text-based or spoken requests, or can be locations that are marked by the user while viewing content, for example by pressing a “locate” button on a remote control. These queries are received, parsed, and sent to the Determine Relevant Content to User module 56.

User queries about program content may include: “What scenes have been filmed or referenced near my current location?” “What movies have been filmed near any location I have been in the last six months?” “What movies have been filmed within 500 miles of Johannesburg?” “What is the location of the movie scene I am viewing now?” “Where is the nearest landmark depicted in this scene located?” “What locations have been marked in the content?” “Show me a map of all locations where Top Gun was filmed.” “Where is the location of the restaurant in Top Gun?” “What is the location of the ‘Sleepless in Seattle’ house?” “Where is the location of the restaurant in the scene that I am viewing now?” “On which locations in Universal Studios was “Back to the Future” filmed?” or “Where is the restaurant located that served apple pie in the series Twin Peaks?”

User queries about advertising content may include “What coupons are available for vendors where I am now?” “Are specials available for stores in my commute area?” or “Do restaurants near where my children are now have any coupons?”

The query results may appear in a number of forms, such as streaming content, as a text message, as an email, as a voiceover, as a QR code on a mobile device, as locations appearing on a map, or as some other form or a combination of forms.

The Present Content process 37 determines how to present relevant content and content information from the set top box 32 to users. Where and how content is presented depends on the User Profile Information 51, the User Query 30 request (if any), presentation devices available to the user, and whether the presentation device has a real-time connection to the set top box 32.

Content may be sent to the user on a local presentation device directly connected to the set top box 32 such as on a television 40 or a video recorder 38, or on remote devices over the Internet, such as the user's mobile device 21 a-21 d. Content information can also be displayed while watching the content, for example a text description or a QR code sent in response to a “location query” while watching a movie.

The Present Content process 37 may notify a user of relevant content for viewing by email or text-message notifications sent to a user's mobile device 20 a, or by notifications that appear when viewing a presentation device 40. For example: “There is a documentary on the construction of mile high stadium on at 3 pm tomorrow.” A user can also be asked if the content should be recorded for later viewing on a device such as a video recorder 38, or all relevant content should be put into a queue for users to view when they are ready.

The Determine Content and Information Relevant to the User process 56 examines the contents of the User Profile Information Database 51 to determine the user preferences for content to automatically present (or “push”) to a user, and examines any user queries from the Receive User Queries process 30 to determine the user preferences for content presentation. The process then accesses the Content Information Database 42, User Geocoding Information Database 44, and Geocoded Assets Database 46 to determine what and how relevant content and information should be presented to the user.

In one embodiment, the location of the one or more users primarily determines the relevant content and information to be presented. Location may be determined by retrieving user geocoding information for one or more users from the User Geocoding Information Database 44 and comparing the information to locations found in a Geocoded Assets Database 46 to determine the locations the user has been in proximity to. Examples of locations include businesses, home addresses, vacation spots, schools, landmarks, traffic routes, etc. The Content Information Database 42 is then searched for content related to these user locations, either through descriptions in content information or through geocoding information associated with specific content segments, to determine relevant program and advertising for the user.

Parameters describing proximity for a user can be found in the User Profile Information Database 51, in a specific User Query 30, or both. Proximity of a user to a location includes but is not limited closeness in distance to a location (nearness), frequency of nearness to a location, time spent near a location, or a route typically driven, for example a commute path. Proximity may also include deviation from normal travel which includes but is not limited to travel patterns on weekdays vs. weekends, travelling outside of a user's normal commute path, or taking a vacation outside of the user's normal travel area. For example the set top box may make program suggestions based on a location, for example “I noticed you were at Sports Authority field, would you like me to set up a recording for the Bronco game this weekend?” Or, “You recently visited Hawaii, and I noticed there is a special documentary about the island of Kauai on this weekend. Shall I record it for you?”

Proximity may be defined to include locations of someone other than the user, for example a husband, a wife, or children, or to include the locations of multiple users and their nearness to each other.

For example, family members father 20 a, mother 20 b, 16 year old daughter 20 c, and 12 year old son 20 d, each carrying mobile devices 21 a-21 d are sitting in the same room containing a presentation device 40 connected to a set top box 32. If the set top box has a real-time connection to the mobile devices, the set top box will know that a family is in the room and suggest family program content such as G-rated movies and advertisements such as family restaurants or family vacations. This may be different than the program suggested if only the two adults 20 a and 20 b were in the room when, for example, a crime drama may be suggested.

Another example involves travel. If the family of four is in a car and drove past a restaurant, and the set top box was in real-time communication with each family member's mobile device, advertising information or a coupon for a family dinner and dessert may be immediately delivered to the parents' mobile devices. If only the parents 20 a and 20 b are in the car and drove by a restaurant in the evening, an advertisement for the restaurant's lounge may be sent to them. As a further example, if a father 20 a and son 20 d are travelling in a car after spending an hour attending a soccer game at a local stadium and drive by a sporting goods store, an advertisement may be sent to the father's mobile device 21 a offering a discount on youth soccer equipment, and a message sent to both the father and son about a documentary on soccer techniques showing that evening and ask them if it should be recorded for later viewing.

In another example, if a wife views an advertisement for a product she likes she marks it to save the information using the set top box. The saved information may contain more than one location that offers the product. When the husband is in proximity of one of those locations he receives a notification to pick up the product.

In another example, a user profile may cause the set top box 32 to notify the user when new program content arrives that had been filmed at a location that the user had been in proximity to over the last six months, or if new advertising content arrives for locations the user had been near during the last two weeks. In addition, a user can designate specific locations or users for special consideration. For example, a wife could mark her favorite store in her profile, and a coupon to the store would be pushed to her husband whenever he drives by the store within a month of her birthday. In addition, users could keep lists, like a registry, to push coupons to the user or other users associated with the set top box when a user is in proximity to a store that sells the item.

In another embodiment, a subscription service may be run by the provider of the set top box, for example by EchoStar®, that drives vendor advertising content to set top box users based on users' locations. In one embodiment, vendor subscription information would be held in the Vendor Subscription Information Database 58 and would be managed by a Vendor Subscription Management process 27. Vendors would sign up for advertisements or coupons to be “pushed” to users based on based the characteristics of the users, such as a user's proximity to a vendor. This information would be used by the Determine Content and Information Relevant to User 56 process to determine what content to push to the user. For example, a local restaurant may push a “walk in now & get 10% off” coupon to a user depending on who is with the user (e.g. a family driving by the restaurant), and how busy the restaurant currently is. A restaurant with open seats may push a coupon out to users in the vicinity of the restaurant. A store with excess inventory levels may push a coupon out to users in the vicinity of the store. The proximity of the user to the vendor may vary from a user simply passing by to a user who is frequently in the area. This allows vendor-generated ads that are tailored to one or more users given the users' changing situations during the day.

In another example, an upscale restaurant can pay a fee to place geocoded tags in program content that references the restaurant, for example if it is featured in a movie scene. If the user watches the geocoded movie, a notification can be sent to the user's mobile device if the user drives by the restaurant, asking the user if the movie should be re-recorded for later viewing, or asking if a restaurant coupon should be pushed to the user.

In another embodiment, a coupon may be presented to a user by a business such as a content provider, local business, satellite company or cable operator when viewing content, including advertising content, displayed via a set top box. These coupons may appear to the user viewing the content in a number of forms, including but not limited to a text “hotlink” overlaying a video image asking the user to accept the coupon using the set top box remote control, or a QR image displayed on the screen and read by a Smartphone.

This coupon, redeemable for goods or services, may be available to a user based on the profile of the user as described above, or on when the content available from the set top box was viewed. For example, a coupon may only be presented if the content was viewed during the original air date, or some amount of time past the air date to allow for time-shifted viewing. For example, a network plans to show the movie “Top Gun” and sells time to a local Harley Davidson dealership to display a discount coupon for that dealership whenever a motorcycle is shown in the movie. The network, to encourage real-time viewing of the content and the advertisements associated with the content, may require that the coupon be available only when watching the movie during the original air time. In another example, the coupon may be made available if the movie was viewed within six hours of recording to accommodate time-shifted viewing.

The coupon can be made available to a user in a number of ways such as but not limited to being electronically downloaded onto a Smartphone or being mailed to the user either electronically or via the US mail. The coupon would then be redeemed according to the terms and conditions of the coupon which may include timeframes for redemption. In some embodiments, to receive the coupon a user may have to make a payment.

Also, the coupon may be modifiable at the time the user accepts the coupon, for example the terms and conditions of the coupon may change based on the business conditions or inventory levels of the coupon offeror. For example, the coupon for a local grocery store may have a redemption life of hours if it wants to excess perishable food items.

Although these above examples relate to families, one with skill in the art will recognize that analogous examples could apply to other types of users associated with a set to box, for example employees at a business.

FIG. 4 is a flow chart describing a process embodiment for sending geocoding information from a mobile device to a set top box. If the user “opts in” 60, the user's mobile device then checks if there is a real-time connection 62 to the set top box 32. If not, then the mobile device will store geocoding information on the mobile device 70 for later transmission to the set top box 32. If there is a real-time connection, the mobile device will upload all stored geocoding information 64 to the set top box 32 and will continue to send geocoding updates 66 while the mobile device is connected in real-time to the set top box 32. If the user's mobile device is not “opted in,” then the application waits 68 until the user “opts in” to gather and send geocoding information.

FIG. 5A shows an embodiment of associating geocoding information with content where the information is encoded within the video PID. FIG. 5B shows geocoding information sent in a separate PID datastream, with data bookmarked back into the video PID. A segment of content, for example a scene in a movie, may have multiple geocoded information associated with that segment.

In addition to the embodiments described, there may be multiple set top boxes in a location with multiple users, which can be connected such that they operate as described above.

The various embodiments described above can be combined to provide further embodiments. All of the U.S. patents, U.S. patent application publications, U.S. patent applications, foreign patents, foreign patent applications and non-patent publications referred to in this specification and/or listed in the Application Data Sheet are incorporated herein by reference, in their entirety. Aspects of the embodiments can be modified, if necessary to employ concepts of the various patents, applications and publications to provide yet further embodiments.

These and other changes can be made to the embodiments in light of the above-detailed description. In general, in the following claims, the terms used should not be construed to limit the claims to the specific embodiments disclosed in the specification and the claims, but should be construed to include all possible embodiments along with the full scope of equivalents to which such claims can be given. 

1. A method, comprising: identifying at a television receiver user geocoding information associated with a mobile device of at least one user; comparing the user geocoding information with a geocoded assets database containing locations of geocoded assets to identify matched locations the at least one user is currently in proximity to; receiving at the television receiver content information containing at least one of program content and advertising content, the content including geocoding information, embedded in the program or advertising content, the geocoding information identifying a location relevant to at least a portion of the content; receiving at the television receiver user content preferences for the at least one user; comparing the matched locations with the embedded geocoding information identifying the location relevant to the at least a portion of the content and with the user content preferences to determine content relevant to the at least one user; and presenting on a presentation device the content relevant to the at least one user, the presenting device presenting to the user in real time data regarding a geocoded asset that is physically close to the user's location.
 2. The method of claim 1, further comprising: storing the user geocoding information on a user geocoding information database accessible by the television receiver; storing the received content information on a content information database accessible by the television receiver; and storing the user content preferences on a user profile information database accessible by the television receiver.
 3. The method of claim 1 wherein identifying at the television receiver user geocoding information includes: receiving the user geocoding information from at least one of: a mobile device running a software application collecting user geocoding information, a wireless network provider in communication with the mobile device, and the mobile device connected via the Internet.
 4. The method of claim 1 wherein presenting on the presentation device content relevant to the at least one user includes at least one of: presenting the content directly to the at least one user, notifying the at least one user that content is available for presentation, and querying the at least one user whether the content is to be recorded for future presentation.
 5. The method of claim 1 wherein presenting on the presentation device content relevant to the at least one user includes presenting content at a time the at least one user is in proximity to the matched location.
 6. The method of claim 2 wherein if there is more than one user, determining content relevant to the at least one user further includes: examining the matched locations for each user, examining the user profile information database to determine relationships between each of the users, and determining the proximity of the users to each other based on relationships between each of the users.
 7. The method of claim 1, further comprising: querying the television receiver by the at least one user to determine whether the at least one user is currently in proximity to any matched locations.
 8. The method of claim 1, wherein presenting on the presentation device content relevant to the at least one user includes: interrogating the at least one user to determine a preferred mode for presenting the content relevant to the at least one user; and presenting the content relevant to the at least one user in the preferred mode.
 9. A system, comprising: a mobile device configured to determine user geocoding information associated with a location of a user; and a receiving device configured to: receive from the mobile device the user geocoding information associated with the user; store the received user geocoding information; compare the received user geocoding information with a geocoded assets database containing locations of geocoded assets to identify matched locations the user is in proximity to; receive content including embedded geocoding information identifying a location relevant to at least a portion of the content; compare the matched locations with the embedded geocoding information to determine content relevant to the user; and output the content relevant to the user.
 10. The system of claim 9 wherein the receiving device is further configured to provide to the mobile device the output content relevant to the user.
 11. The system of claim 9, further comprising a presentation device communicatively coupled to the receiving device, wherein the receiving device is further configured to provide to the presentation device the output content relevant to the user.
 12. The system of claim 9 wherein the received content includes advertising content including embedded geocoding information identifying one or more locations for accepting an advertised offer.
 13. The system of claim 9 wherein the received content includes program content including embedded geocoding information identifying at least one of: a filming location of a scene, a location represented in a scene, a location of an object appearing in a scene, and a location where a broadcast event is being held.
 14. The system of claim 9 wherein the receiving device is further configured to receive user content preferences for the user, and to compare the matched locations with the embedded geocoding information and the user content preferences to determine the content relevant to the user.
 15. The system of claim 14 wherein the receiving device is further configured to: extract content information from the received content, the extracted content information including the embedded geocoding information; store the extracted content information on a content information database; and store the received user content preferences on a user profile information database.
 16. The system of claim 9 wherein the receiving device is a set top box.
 17. A non-transitory computer-readable storage medium storing instructions which, when executed by a processing system in a receiving device, cause the processing system to: receive user geocoding information from a mobile device associated with a user; store the geocoding information on a user geocoding information database; compare the geocoding information with a geocoded assets database containing locations of geocoded assets to identify matched locations the user is currently in proximity to; receive content including embedded geocoding information identifying a location relevant to at least a portion of the content; receive user content preferences for the user; and compare the matched locations with the embedded geocoding information identifying the location relevant to the at least a portion of the content and the user content preferences to determine content relevant to the user.
 18. The non-transitory computer-readable storage medium of claim 17 wherein the instructions, when executed by the processing system, further cause the processing system to: provide the determined content relevant to the user to the mobile device.
 19. The non-transitory computer-readable storage medium of claim 17 wherein the instructions, when executed by the processing system, further cause the processing system to: provide the determined content relevant to the user to a presentation device communicatively coupled to the receiving device.
 20. The non-transitory computer-readable storage medium of claim 17 wherein the instructions, when executed by the processing system, further cause the processing system to: extract content information from the received content, the extracted content information including the embedded geocoding information; store the extracted content information on a content information database; and store the received user content preferences on a user profile information database. 